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EBMUD Bans Some Boats From Pardee and Camanche |
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Monday, 28 January 2008 |
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The appearance in Northern
California of an alien mussel, which multiplies so fast it chokes
out native species, prompted the East Bay Municipal Utility District Thursday
to ban some boats from its reservoirs. The restrictions will affect Pardee and Camanche
Reservoirs; as well as the San Pablo, Lafayette,
Chabot and Briones reservoirs in the East
Bay. The ban
prevents all boats from Southern California, San
Benito County, Santa Clara County
and any boat from outside California,
from boating in any of the district's reservoirs. All other boats will be
forced to undergo inspections before entering the water at lakes managed by the
utility district, including Pardee and Camanche reservoirs.
Quagga and
zebra mussels are native to Eastern Europe and are believed to have spread to North America on the hull of ships and boats. The tiny
critters are extremely aggressive, clogging pipes, starving indigenous species and producing toxins that
are harmful to native fish and mollusk populations. The invaders create
millions of larvae eggs that continue to grow and multiply. Officials have no
surefire way of getting rid of them.
Many of the waterways throughout Northern
California are connected and water officials are considering
further bans.
According to East Bay District General Manager Dennis Diemer, the
success of the District’s preventative efforts depends on the support and
cooperation of the boating public and the cooperation of all recreational
areas. The East Bay Municipal Utility
District asks boaters to avoid all lakes outside of California
and most waterways in Santa ClaraSan Benito counties and the Tehachapi
Mountains. To prevent quagga or zebra mussel infestation, boaters
should inspect all exposed
surfaces on boats, trailers and their vehicles, wash the hull thoroughly after
each use, remove plant and animal material and thoroughly drain and dry
live-wells and the outboard unit, dispose of all bait, and wait five days
between launches into different freshwater bodies of water. Anyone who spots the mussels
is asked to call the Department of Fish and Game at (866) 440-9530. For more
information, go to the agency's Web site at address on your screen. and
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